The website offers advice for kids (ages 2-11) on how to watch the eclipse safely, an educational video with the Space Racers characters, a hands-on eclipse activity and an "eclipse viewing kit" that's available for purchase. The aim is to help kids understand the science behind the total eclipse.

The show has featured plotlines that introduce youngsters to a curriculum focused on STEM (science, technology, engineering and math).

The "Space Racers" team has brought on multiple partners and two eclipse "ambassadors" for the AugustEclipse.com initiative. Those partners include the U.S. Space & Rocket Center, the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Readiness Learning Associates, the SPARK Academy for STEM Education, and Arlington Public Schools of Virginia.

Emily Calandrelli, an Emmy-nominated science TV host and Twitter personality @thespacegal, will be one of the ambassadors. She will also publish a new children's STEM book series called "Ada Lace" (Simon & Schuster, Aug. 29, 2017)

Another ambassador will be David Baron, author of "American Eclipse" (Liveright, 2017), which talks about the 1878 solar eclipse and how it helped the United States rise as a world power. Baron is a former science correspondent for NPR and a former science editor for PRI's "The World," and he has watched five total solar eclipses.

"Through our dedicated partners and ambassadors, 'Space Racers' aims to be the authority for teaching our youngest learners all about the eclipse and to introduce them to one of science's most important tools — observation," said Matthias Schmitt, chief marketing officer of "Space Racers," in a statement.

"'Space Racers' does a tremendous job of reaching kids with stories of planetary science," said Joseph Vick, manager of museum education at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center (one of the partner institutions), in the statement. "I can't imagine a better resource for teachers, parents or camps trying to better understand how to explain these wonders to kids."